Running Naked in the Halls

Spring                                             Bloodroot Moon

Cost $10 in public transportation + airfare to get to the Hotel Harrington.  $6.50 in Minnesota and $3.50 on the metro here in D.C.  Pretty slick.  Got off at the Metro Center stop which let me out a block and a half from the hotel.

The Harrington is an old darling of a hotel.  Thick paint on the woodwork, many different refreshes over the years.  A few nicks and cracks in the tile, a room that would make a monastery feel good in terms of decor.  Just right.  And in the heart of things.  The National Gallery is four blocks one way, the Whitehouse about the same in the opposite direction.

When I checked in the receptionist had handed a teacher a sheaf of papers and said, “Be sure to read that stuff to your kids.  Wait.  They’re college age, right?” They were.  “Well, then they probably know, no running naked in the halls.” I chimed in with, “You try to stop that?”

When my turn came, I did check to be sure they’d given me a quiet room.  “Yes, sir.  The 10th floor.  Quiet.”  “Good,”  I said, “I like kids, but I like them on their own floor.”

The Harrington books lots of high school and college civics and political science classes coming to see real live politicians in their natural environment.  Some will go home scarred, others will devote all their energy to getting back here.

It’s a seductive place, D.C., just as all major capitols are.  Rome in its day.  Xi’an.  Beijing.  London.  Paris.  Cairo.  Jerusalem.  There was a time…  But that was long ago.

Waitin’ on the Jet Plane

Spring                                         Bloodroot Moon

Sitting in E-1 departure gate, looking at the planes snugged up in their bays with the jetways stuck onto their sides like remora.  The day is bright, sunlight streaming down, the sun’s angle higher, spring-like.  The temperature though is January.

I missed Mark and Mary on the Skype call.  Looked for you guys and didn’t see you online.  I’ll pick you up later.

On the Northstar rail I sat with two kids, school age, who got off at the Coon Rapids station.  Never occurred to me that it was a school bus as well as a ride to work.  Makes sense.

Riding on commuter rail, then light rail, in your own town, is a different experience from using the same services in other cities.  There’s none of that residual anxiety.  Where am I?  Is this my stop?  Did I miss my stop?  Even the warehouses are familiar.

There is though a certain tinge of strangeness, of alien experience in a known land.  We’re not accustomed to whizzing past buildings on rails.  Some of us are by now, of course.  Regular riders of the Hiawatha Line and Northstar.

Still, most of us, including me, have this transportation most often in faraway places:  Chicago, New York, Washington, London, Singapore, Bangkok, Tokyo.  That creates the odd sense of being on a mode of transport familiar in foreign climes, not home, while at home.

The rail cost, $6.50, compares to $100.00 for taxi or around $50 for a shared ride.  Probably takes about the same amount of time. It also let Kate drop me off at 7:05, then return home and have breakfast only 10 minutes later.  Slick.

It feels good to on the road again.  Travel came with the bloodline and it sings a happy tune in transit.  After passing through security.

 

In Spite of the Evidence on the Ground, the Sky Says It’s Spring

Spring                                                                 Bloodroot Moon

I’m beginning to wonder whether I misnamed this moon.  Not sure the bloodroot’s gonna bloom before it wanes.  16 degrees out now, headed down to 2 tonight.  Average daily high now 40 degrees.  But, in terms of astronomical events today is the day we shift past the  the celestial mid-point and the celestial equator. (see illustration)

That makes spring the formal designation.  Meteorological spring began on March 1st, but I follow the stars as does the Great Wheel.  The Vernal Equinox has a long tradition as not only the start of spring, but of the new year.  It lost its spot as the New Year in 18th century England, 1752 to be exact, when Lady Day, March 25th (a fixed date to celebrate the coming of spring and the new year and the feast of the annunciation), lost its New Year’s Day status to January 1st as the Gregorian calendar reforms began.

Today neither meteorological spring nor astronomical spring puts us in that season.  The weather is not co-operating with the calendar in either instance.  There’s a lesson here.  Rules, no matter how precise, or how ancient, no matter how usually reliable or hoaried with veneration, can never overcome, as the military says, the facts on the ground.

The lesson of the Great Wheel will, however, grind its way toward truth.  At some point the winds will shift.  The cold air will retreat back to the North Pole.  The snow will melt and the grass will green, flowers bloom and children ride their bikes in the streets.

Even though today doesn’t shout out verdant or shorts and t-shirts the vitality of Mother Earth is only delayed, not denied.  When we use the seasons as a metaphor for human life, we can imagine that we have passed the spring time of our lives.  This is not so.  Our bodies, yes, they continue on, hammered by entropy, drawn back toward the earth by the gravity of our years, but our soul, or whatever that mysterious piece of us is that hovers in and around that body, renews itself over and over.

Take down a new book.  Pick up a hammer, or a carving tool, or lines of computer code.  Perhaps a paint brush or a blank page.  Visit the grandkids or an old friend or make a new friend.  The sparks of love and creativity in our lives can rejuvenate us over and over again, turning a winter, even one that seems determined to stay too long, into a springtime.  Those seeds you planted when you were twenty, but forgot to water?  Remember them.  This is their season.  Wake them up.

Pain

Imbolc                                                                         Bloodroot Moon

Put your shoulder into it.  Increasingly difficult for me, at least on my left shoulder.  This is a post about pain, aging, the third phase.  Not because pain during aging is new or a surprise, not, rather the opposite, because its common.  Known.  Experienced.  But rarely discussed.

As the body changes, at any time, sure, but especially as we age and the terminus grows closer, we bring our personal history into our consideration, our weighing, our evaluation.

The shoulder pain, for example, pushes me back to a certain Madison County 4-H fair in August of 1949.  I’m young, very young, 2 1/2 years old, but I swear I remember the bare light bulbs strung on thin braided electrical cord, pink cotton candy, my blue blanket and my mother’s shoulder as she carried me.  I also remember a shiver, a full body shudder as I registered what I later came to believe was the onset of polio.

Whether this was the moment and whether the memory is even possible is uncertain.  That I would go on to contract bulbar polio and be paralyzed completely on my left side for over six months is not.

So, 63 some years later, when my left shoulder makes me wince as I lift my arm or move it  backwards or pains me especially if I try to lift an object, like a book, with my arm extended, as I’ve done many times in the last couple of weeks as I reordered my studies and eliminated books, my thoughts go to polio.  More specifically post-polio syndrome.

Probably not post-polio, a slippery diagnosis, not completely believed in by docs.  Probably not.  But that doesn’t make me stop considering it.

This pain has persisted, now maybe two months.  Not long, compared to someone like, say Kate, who has had persistent back, hip and neck pain for over 20 years.  But long enough to make me ready to see a doctor.  I want a diagnosis.

So Kate’s hunting for the best shoulder doc in the orthopedic community.  I’ll see whomever she finds and go from there.  In the meantime I waver between accepting the pain, avoiding the movements that exacerbate it, and medicating it.  I don’t like either of those choices.  If I can help it through exercise, or if I won’t make it worse by using it in spite of the pain, I’ll exercise and use it.  Just put up with it.  Maybe add some meds to help even things out.

If I can’t help it through exercise or if moving it creates more problems, then I’ll really need a doc because I’m in a bad place at that point.  I depend on exercise as part of my personal health regimen and having to back away from any part of it is not something I’m willing to do.  At least right now.

This will be a continuing series.  Part of the third phase.

 

 

Imagining the Future

Imbolc                                                                   Bloodroot Moon

A friend last night said we don’t spend enough time thinking about the future.  I believe he also meant imagining it, then trying to press ourselves toward it.  He may be right, I don’t know.

I know in my youth, say from 13 or so until the waning years of my forties, I had clear images of the future and put my back into seeing them come to be.  When junior boys couldn’t go to the senior prom, for example, I decided we needed to have junior prom.  And we did.  Seniors had always bought their rings from Jostens.  I thought we needed bids.  We chose Herff-Jones.

In college it was eliminating in loco parentis, the war in vietnam, racism.  We manged the first, raised hell about the second and, well, the last one.  Not so much.  Later feminism, affordable housing, normalization for the developmentally disabled, neighborhood based economic development, a jobs response to unemployment.  We made good progress on all of these.  Examples.  There were others, many others.

However.  Today we fight in Afghanistan, just finished up in Iraq.  The class inequality in the US and its attendant ills:  homelessness, joblessness, foodlessness are as high as ever.  Those neighborhoods in which the affordable housing got built and the businesses started as owner co-operatives worker managed.  Mostly out of business.  I imagine the senior class at Alexandria High is back to Jostens by now.  And no more junior proms.

Thankfully women are no longer locked in their dorms after ten on college campuses.  I’m not saying there hasn’t been progress.  Actually, I believe there has been.  And in difficult areas like racism, feminism, gay rights.  All to the good.  Not far enough, no, not by any means, but some progress, yes.

Yet the deep painful trench that separates the 99% from the 1% has gotten only wider.  Our new gilded age had some of its gold-plating knocked off, revealing a lot of brass, some tin and lots of lead, but the plating is mostly back now.

My point is this.  Imagining the future is one thing.  Not a bad thing to do I suppose, though it might be, but working for change is quite another.  It’s messy, painful and often fails.  Imagining can be a diversion from working now, for what’s possible, in incremental ways.  And in that sense we may imagine the future far too much.

Links to songs in Mandarin from a tumblr post.

gondoleia:

❝ 知人知面知己知彼又知心//古人说这就是所谓知音 
or: a collection of mandarin songs that are worth a listen

the kind-of oldies 

teresa teng the moon represents my heart ● tian mi mi ● dan yuan ren chang jiu● little town story fei yuqing a sprig of plum blossoms ● this handful of soil kris phillips clouds of my homeland zhang yusheng ocean blues luo dayou childhood ● pearl of the east tsai chin heartbreak station dadawa story of the red-crowned cranes faye wong red bean ● mortal world qi yu olive tree

the newer stuff

raymond ma jade robes jay chou red dust tavern ● shanghai 1943 ● east wind breaks ● blue and white porcelain wang leehom still in love with you ● sun washed in spring rain ● mistake of the flower fields ● bo ya breaks the string ● do you love me a’bao lan hua hua han hong endless love (with sun nan)  jing boranbu guo qing ren jie ● can’t stop jolin tsai wandering poet jason zhang under heaven ● after tomorrow anthony neely wake up ● sorry that i loved you tan jinglove at kangmei ● love south of the river khalil fong close to you ● bb88 sa ding ding love in 2012 sodagreen little love song ● (ft. ella) i was written in your song ●swallow’s nest phoenix legend moonlight over the lotus pool ● above the moon wulan tuoya plastic flowers ● lassoing horses liu huan  crescent moon han geng clown mask ● wild cursive li yugang the drunken concubine ● (ft. shi tou) yu hua shi

theme songs

free-floating flower (reign of assassins) ● wander (swordsman) ● flying together (butterfly lovers 2007) ● far away (butterfly lovers 2007) ● heaven and earth are in your heart (legend of the condor heroes 2003) ● mulan qing (hua mulan 2009) ●mulan star (hua mulan 2009) ● painted heart (painted skin 2008) ● painted heart (painted skin: the resurrection 2012) ● jiang hu yao (rose martial world) ● ru hua (da ya huan) ● hui bu qu (spell of the fragrance) ● shang shan ruo shui (spell of the fragrance) ● buddha says (jade palace lock heart 2) ● hawthorn blooming (under the hawthorn tree) ● under the hawthorn tree (under the hawthorn tree)

Botox

Imbolc                                                                              Bloodroot Moon

Great line in a note from Tom Byfield, longtime docent at the MIA, recently resigned.  He writes:  For many years being a docent was the Botox I needed to ease my way into old age feeling good about myself.  This is third phase thinking, considering this next, long portion of our lives and deciding what’s necessary to keep feeling good.

We all need some reconstructive surgery as we move away from life’s second phase, the one of work/career and family.  That is, we have to reshape, reconfigure our presence in the world.  This is different, in my mind at least, from reinventing yourself.  Not sure I’d want to do that. Not sure I could do that. But discovering new parts of myself or neglected parts that could blossom with sufficient attention, now that’s important.  And doable.

Another way to think about this is that the first two phases of life, education and career/family are instrumental.  We see ourselves as in training for something to do, then doing it, often with a spouse and children.  Much of the angst of the first two phases of life comes in the tension between the (necessary) instrumental view of our self and the Self aching to discover its true purpose.  The lucky ones match the instrumental with Self discovery, but most aren’t so lucky.

In the third phase of life though the instrumental drops away and the Self emerges, perhaps as out of a cocoon, with wings and the ability to fly.  After all those years of crawling along the ground.  Wow.  But, it turns out, flying is scary and leaving the ground behind also means leaving behind a lifetime of habits and learnings for the unknown.  It’s not surprising that so many fail to even spread their wings during the third phase.

We humans often hold close pain in preference to change, being familiar with the outline and shape of our misery while ignorant of the other.  We fear those things we do not know and this is wise.  It lends that side note of caution that often keeps us safe.  But, it turns out, that same side note can keep us from growing, from spreading those new wings and heading off into the morning.

So this is a message of encouragement if you’re stuck right now, hanging on to the job, the career, the skills that made you successful.  They’re not you; they’re things you learned.  Now you have an opportunity to learn some more.  I hope you take the chance.  Crawl out of that chrysalis and find out what life has to offer today.

 

 

What he said:

“Please,” he told them. “Let us be protectors of creation, protectors of God’s plan inscribed in nature, protectors of one another and of the environment.”   Pope Francis I  Well, ok, I might quibble with that three letter word, but hey, whatever floats your pope.

Goin’ In, Fishin’ Around

Imbolc                                                                      Bloodroot Moon

“Things never were “the way they used to be.”
Things never will be “the way it’s going to be someday.”
Things are always just the way they are for the time being.
And the time being is always is motion.”

Alexander Xenopouloudakis

Warren, Frank, Bill, Mark, Scott and I gathered at Frank’s for the traditional St. Patrick’s dinner.  It was a light turnout for this always festive meal featuring tonight shamrock shaped ravioli.  This was a mixing of cultures, a bit of culinary diversity.  Otherwise it was the corned beef, cabbage, short bread and potatoes.  What I’ve always imagined as the peak meal in a year for poor Irish folk.  It sure tastes good to this one-half Celtic guy, with half of that coming from the auld sod.

We had an interesting evening discussing what I described as the mechanist versus the vitalist debate.  This is an oldy but goody from the 19th century, a debate very far from over and anyone who follows the neurobiological thinking about the brain will find it much alive in the third millennium.  Here’s a review of Ray Kurzweil’s (the Singularity guy) new book: How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed.  It focuses on this topic through careful thinking about the distinction between the brain and consciousness.

We also had a brief encounter over a topic dug into deep to my psyche, that of our solipsism.  We construct our own reality using sense data, organized and turned into information by the brain, then utilized as part of consciousness to define the world as we experience it.  This solipsism makes the existential argument that existence is prior to essence; that is, that our life is not being human; it is about being ourselves, a particular instance of human.

In a book I’m reading right now:   Where the Heart Beats: John Cage, Zen Buddhism, and the Inner Life of Artists by Kay Larson (reviewed at this link) the author describes the Zen idea of no permanent identity, no permanent reality, that is, we are what we are in this moment, then what we are in the next moment and so on.  It fits very well with this conversation, the uneasy, slippery grasp we have on who we are as individuals and what we’re experiencing at any one time.  In a sense Zen increases the degree of relativity created by our solipsistic situation to an infinite number of slices, not even necessarily threaded together by an identity.

If embraced, this is deeply disturbing.  It shakes the foundations, as Paul Tillich said.  In fact the earthquake is so severe that intellectual structures built over thousands of years come crashing to the ground and disappear.  We do not like this stripping away of the animal cunning that gives us the illusion of permanence.  What then is left?

Not very damned much.  If embraced, this is profoundly liberating.  Those structures fall to the ground and disappear.  Religion and tradition and politics and culture no longer have power to frame us, shape us, define us.  We are free.  Free in a radical, personal, cosmic sense.  Neither chained to the earth or to the past or to each other, not even to self.

The world moves through and in us, just as we float through and in it.  When I can bring this awareness to consciousness, when I experience it, at first I feel disoriented, tethered no longer.  At moments it seems I (the I of this aware moment) might split apart, shred into molecular portions and drift away.

 

 

 

 

 

Winter on the First Day of Spring

Imbolc                                                         Bloodroot Moon

It has come to that brittle point in any winter, the time when it seems to stretch on and on and on.  Snow tonight, perhaps 2-4 inches.  Then drops to single digit lows for three days in a row.  The high for the first day of spring 18.  The low 4. Outsiders to the north cannot understand, but this makes us happy.  Last year on this date the temperature was 80.  80.

There was no yearning for the end of winter.  No, a fear that winter might be gone pervaded our region.  Had we become a northern latitude Indianapolis?  What did we do in our gardens in March?  Most Marches we still have snow on the ground like we do now.

Yes, as we age those slick sidewalks give us pause.  But what gives us more pause is the northward march of what we’ve always considered southern temperatures.  In March.  We’re used to hot.  We get up in the 100’s from time to time, more recently.  We put up with it the way southern folk endure a spell of 50 or 60 degree weather.  Unhappily.

Cabin fever, that claustrophobic I’ve been in the house way too long feeling, that hits us now?  That’s the brittle point I referred to in the first paragraph.  We all know it at one level or another.  Well this northerner, and I’m sure I’m not alone, would not trade cabin fever for fevered temperatures in March.  It just doesn’t feel right.